She will represent North Cobb High at the Georgia SkillsUSA Leadership and Skills Conference.
It will be held at 6 p.m. Feb. 13.
School will be dismissed as normal.
The school has three locations in New York and four in New Jersey.
Nominations will be accepted from Feb. 1 until March 15.
Join the Lassiter High School community this weekend to support an injured high school student.
Other weekend offerings include an art exhibit and a run to raise money for the medical expenses of a Lassiter High graduate.
The appointment of a chief academic officer is scheduled to be taken up at Thursday night's meeting.
Jennifer Rippner was the education policy advisor to Gov. Sonny Perdue.
The school held its spelling bee on Thursday.
The Warriors recently brought home top honors.
Acworth schools will be among the 40 Cobb schools in Saturday's competition at McEachern.
The Board of Education heard early forecasts for projected fiscal year 2014 numbers Wednesday.
The newly-installed Board of Education has finalized the dates and times of its official meetings in 2013.
Randy Scamihorn of Kennesaw took office Wednesday.
North Cobb's Randy Scamihorn is one of two newly elected representatives who will be sworn in on Wednesday.
Today is a student holiday and workday.
The Cobb County School District has released the schedule of graduations for the county's 16 high schools.
Players from North Cobb and Harrison High Schools are on the roster.
Percentile results were slightly down from 2011 in percentile rankings; grade equivalency marks had a similar drop.
Today's Cobb Board of Education will be the last for Lynnda Eagle, whose post covers Acworth and Kennesaw.
Every traditional high school had 90 percent or more of students passing the 2012 Georgia High School Writing Test.
Only two states–Connecticut and Maryland– require schools to install carbon monoxide alarms.
Some highlights of proposed construction and maintenance work before Cobb voters in the March 2013 referendum.
The Cobb school board also appointed two elementary school principals this week.
The Cobb Board of Education approved a resolution Wednesday, but heard a strong dose of anti-tax sentiment.
Wednesday's work session agenda includes a resolution for a March 2013 referendum.
Both schools clinched the No. 2 seed in their regions.
Recruitment for a short-term technology training program will take place Nov. 15.
And Republican newcomer Randy Scamihorn, a retired military officer turned educator, will take over in Northwest Cobb for Lynnda Eagle, who didn’t seek reelection after her first term.
It was the first gathering of past North Cobb High Teachers of the Year.
Any student who has not completed the test by Dec. 31, 2013, will be required to start over and retake all five parts.
In today's elections, residents will have two choices—incumbent Alison Bartlett and Brad Wheeler—for the newly defined Post 7.
Tim Stultz and Kathleen Angelucci have asked that the proposed March 2013 Cobb school sales tax referendum be pushed back to November of next year.
The revised project list will be discussed at a special called meeting on Monday.
Marty Galbraith, who was as an assistant special teams coach for the Tennessee Titans from 2005-11, resigned from the Cobb School District last week.
Students from North Cobb were among the top winners.
As a result of the Success for All Students project, there has been a decrease in fights, students on juvenile probation and the number of 15-day absences.
North Cobb board member Lynnda Eagle, who is leaving office at the end of the year, was dismayed that some elementary schools will continue to have trailers through the SPLOST IV collection period.
By a 4-2 vote, the board adopted Superintendent Michael Hinojosa's recommendation to begin the 2013-14 school year on Aug. 7.